Outraged Italy demands justice for student slain in Egypt

ROME, Feb 8 (Reuters) - An outraged Italy demanded on Monday
that Egypt catch and punish those responsible for the death of
student Giulio Regeni, whose tortured, half-naked corpse was
found in a roadside ditch in Cairo last week.

Regeni, a 28-year-old graduate student at Britain's
Cambridge University, had been researching independent trade
unions in Egypt and had written articles critical of President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's government.

The incident has strained ties between Rome and Cairo, which
has made no arrests so far.

"We want the real perpetrators to be discovered and punished
according to the law," Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni
told La Repubblica newspaper on Monday. He said Italy "will not
be satisfied with suppositions" to explain the death.

Cambridge University said it had written to the Egyptian
authorities to demand a full investigation into Regeni's death.

An initial autopsy in Egypt showed Regeni had been hit on
the back of the head with a sharp instrument, beaten and burnt
with cigarettes, according to a senior official at the Cairo
public prosecutor's office and a forensic doctor. Both spoke on
condition of anonymity.

A second autopsy in Italy "confronted us with something
inhuman, something animal", Interior Minister Angelino Alfano
told Sky News 24 television on Sunday. "It was like a punch in
the stomach and we haven't quite got our breath back yet".

Italian media said the second autopsy ascertained that
Regeni's neck had been broken. This has not been officially
confirmed.

Italian opposition parties have demanded that Prime Minister
Matteo Renzi's government take a tougher stand with Egypt.

"The death of Giulio Regeni, who was tortured to death, is
still opaque and shrouded in shadows," said the opposition
5-Star party. "We demand the truth."

On Sunday night, some 2,000 people held a candlelit march in
Fiumicello, his hometown in north-east Italy.

"We want a commitment at every level to shed light on what
happened to Giulio," mayor Ennio Scridel told the mourners.

Italy has sent members of its special operations police
force to Cairo to participate in the investigation.

Tensions had been high in Egypt at the time of Regeni's
disappearance, which coincided with the fifth anniversary of an
uprising that toppled former president Hosni Mubarak.

Rights groups say police often detain Egyptians on scanty
evidence and that they are beaten or coerced. Scores have
disappeared since 2013, the groups say. Egypt denies allegations
of police brutality.

The left-wing Italian newspaper Il Manifesto which published
Regeni's articles said he had used a pseudonym because he feared
for his safety. He did not mention specific threats.
(Additional reporting by Ahmed Mohamed Hassan in Cairo, Editing
by Philip Pullella and Gareth Jones)